Poll
Question:
Should I be limiting the use of the pucks with thicker meat? Or load it up and walk away?
Option 1: how much smoke?
votes: 2
Option 2: Meat to thick?
votes: 1
I just got my Bradley yesterday and when I got home from work I found myself in the backyard at 1am trying to get some Tri Tip steak going. I am not a seasoned smoker like some of you but my concern was that I found the steak to be dry and very very smokey flavored. was it to hot? cold? to long? to many pucks? I had it in there on medium for about 6 hours. I am assuming it was to warm for that amount of time... should I only use 2 hours worth of pucks? Any advice?
W E L C O M E to the Forum Rogue1!
What flavor smoke?
Six hours is a lot for a tri-tip, IMHO.
I would probably put 2 hours on it or until the IT is 105F, then transfer to a hot grill until the IT is 124F for medium rare.
Rogue1 ....... Welcome!
Sounds like you went a little too far with the smoke and cook time.
Here's some things that might help.
recipe site:
http://www.susanminor.org/forums/
You might want to check out our FAQ's
http://www.susanminor.org/forums/showthread.php?p=748#post748
Try this link to get your pictures going.
http://www.susanminor.org/forums/showpost.php?p=768&postcount=11
Thank you all for the help, I am assuming all this smoking I will be doing will be a great learning process! Should I keep the smoke to it the entire 2 hours? Or does it just depend on my taste?
Quote from: Rogue1 on August 06, 2010, 01:52:37 PM
Thank you all for the help, I am assuming all this smoking I will be doing will be a great learning process! Should I keep the smoke to it the entire 2 hours? Or does it just depend on my taste?
The amount of smoke is a very subjective thing. You will learn what you like and don't like. Some flavors are stronger than others. Mesquite is the strongest, then Hickory and Oak, Pecan, Maple, Apple, Alder.
I did the exact same thing for my first smoke experience, except I did ribs. I wasn't aware of these forums until a few months later, so naturally I ate a lot of really smokey, dry ribs. There's definitely a learning curve and our mistakes help us learn. Even though the mistakes are frustrating, it's also fun to see improvement every time. It's a shame that delicious meat becomes less desirable during this time but when you nail it consistently later on it's totally worth it. Having a small army of fanatics to help you out doesn't hurt either ;D
welcome to the forum,
id start off with two hours of smoke and adjust from there .. if at 2 hours is still to much, remove 1 bisquette... 2 hours not enough add 1 and keep going till you find what you like... my opinion is it depends on what you like and the type of wood you are using, hickory and misquette are strong woods so 2 hours might be good ,, while your mild or sweet woods yuou might use 3 or more hours
I've never smoked a tri tip before but might try it. My favorite way to cook one is to rub on some garlic powder and Strawberries Steak Shake. Fold the small end up so the meat is more of a rectangle (for more even cooking) and wrap with two layers of foil. Place off the heat on my grill on low till the IT gets to about 120F pull from the grill and cover with a towel to rest for a bit till the IT gets up to 135-140F then slice on a diagonal from top to bottom so the pieces are wider. The juice will fill up your plate...
John